April Event
Saturday 25 April 2026 in Connemara Golf Links
-
Rivalry Spotlight: Paul O’Donnell just turned the tide at Hole 16 with a birdie, pushing his round into a tighter, more competitive rhythm. At 19th with 21 total points, that birdie is a timely jab in any head-to-head battle—especially when the round trend is declining.
When O’Donnell gets one of those momentum swings, it tends to force his rival to respond immediately—because one hole can quickly change the pressure.
Next up: Watch how Paul defends the momentum from here on out—this is exactly where rivalries start to feel personal.
-
Danny Finn is still out in front at -7 after 16, but the leaderboard’s certainly got some edge to it now. Liam Rockall moves up quickly—-5 after 17—and suddenly that top gap isn’t quite as wide as it looked. Eoghan Considine is steady in the chase at -4 after 16, while Ciaran Considine makes his presence felt with -3 after 17; that’s a charge that tells you he’s not done, and it tightens the competition around Finn.
Down the rest of the board, Dave Flanagan is still holding at -2 after 18, but everyone else is fighting for position: Ciaran Greene is E after 16, and the group at +3 to +4—Brendan Considine +3 after 18, and Mike Rockall, Evan O’Keeffe and Alan Dempsey all at +4—are now playing for pride and maybe a late swing. Right now, it’s Finn’s experience versus everyone else’s urgency; the question is whether Rockall and the Considines can keep their foot on the accelerator through the finish.
-
Oi Daire Greene… +6 through 17 and you’re still lookin’ for that “two-putt” like it’s a myth. 😤
Bogey on 17? Mate, that wasn’t even a bump—more like a full-on detour! 👏⛳
Stay classy, you’re in 12th… but your putting is doing parkour. 🕺💦
-
Tom Curtin out here defending that +7 like it’s a family heirloom 😭 Hole 17 bogey and you’re still fighting for your life in 14th. Declining round? More like free-fall. Nice putt—almost made it to the other fairway!
-
Oh Ciaran Considine… in 4th with 37 points, but it feels like you’re constantly swinging through traffic instead of the ball. The takeaway’s a little too “hope and pray,” the transition looks like it’s improvising, and the finish? Pure style points with almost zero consistency. Every time you come over it looks like the clubhead’s late, the face isn’t quite married to your path, and suddenly your scorecard turns into modern art. If you want to climb, start striking like you mean it and stop letting momentum do your job.
-
🚨 FULL SWING update!
Netflix can’t confirm everything… but we are hearing Ciaran Considine could be back for next season. 👀
From what we’ve seen: his vibe is pure competitive calm—focused, quick with the grin, and the type to turn pressure into momentum. And after that eagle on 17? That’s exactly the kind of “watch this” energy Full Swing loves.
What might he do on the show? Expect high-stakes, never-say-die moments, candid takes when the swings go sideways—and then those clutch, controlled finish shots when everyone else panics. With him in 4th on 37 points and trending up, the drama writes itself. 📺⛳
-
Yessss Ciaran Considine!!! 🔥 Hole 17 eagle and you’re up to 4th—let’s go! 💪⛳️ Round trend: improving, keep that momentum rolling and finish strong!!!
-
Rivalry update: Ciaran Considine has just nuked one for an eagle on Hole 17, and it’s a statement shot in the matchup everyone’s watching. Sitting in 4th with 37 points, his round trend is improving—and that’s exactly when this rivalry tends to swing.
After earlier resistance from his rival, Considine’s momentum now looks harder to stop: two holes can be the difference between trading volleys and taking full control, and this eagle is the kind of swing that shifts the psychological tide.
-
Liam Rockall is absolutely flying under the radar—he’s playing with that calm, confident tempo that makes every swing look like it belongs on highlight reels. The ball is coming off his club clean, and his pace through the turf is so smooth you can almost hear the strike. Right now in 2nd, with 39 points, he’s showing the kind of control and aggression that wins tournaments.
-
BREAKING (rumor)! 🏌️♂️ Liam Rockall—yes, that Liam—might be joining next season of Full Swing.
After backing up on Hole 17 with an eagle to sit 2nd with 39 points and an improving trend, we’re expecting big energy: calm under pressure, sharp instincts, and—if his on-course vibe holds—plenty of candid, funny moments when the cameras roll.
What will he do on the show? Probably the same thing he does on the course: turn momentum into magic… and look way too comfortable doing it. 👀
-
LET’S GO, Liam Rockall! 🔥 Eagle on 17 and you’ve still got that momentum—2nd place and climbing! 📈 Keep rolling, don’t let up. 💪⛳️ #Golf #OnFire
-
Liam Rockall has gone and found something special on Hole 17—an eagle to move into second, lifting the atmosphere right off the turf.
That eagle takes him to 39 total points at -5, and the trend is improving—he’s starting to look like a man in full control.
Now it’s all about composing himself for the last hole. In a position like this, you don’t need fireworks—you need focus, and Liam’s showing it.
-
Rivalry Update: Liam Rockall just turned the heat on his rival—an eagle at Hole 17 with the momentum firmly in his favor.
Rockall’s round trend is improving, and that late surge puts him in 2nd with 39 points—exactly the kind of swing that tends to define this matchup: pressure, quick answers, and momentum that forces the other player to chase instead of dictate.
With Rockall moving upward as the closing stretch tightens, this rivalry looks set to come down to who holds their nerve on the final holes.
-
Danny Finn has turned the screw—-7 after 16—and it’s the kind of position that makes even the steadier players look briefly unsure. Eoghan Considine is right in the heat now at -4 after 16, but the real talking point is how Liam Rockall has slipped to -3 after 16; you can see that gap narrowing, and with it the temptation for others to press. Dave Flanagan is holding his nerve at -2 after 18, while Ciaran Considine creeps to -1 after 16—that’s a workable score, but it’s no longer a winning one.
Then you’ve got the lower part of the board where the course starts to feel personal: Ciaran Greene at E after 16, Brendan Considine still at +3 after 18, and the chasing pack hanging together with Evan O’Keeffe +4 after 15, Alan Dempsey +4 after 16, and Mike Rockall +4 after 15. For Finn, the closing holes now aren’t about fireworks—they’re about keeping the ball in play and letting the others do the chasing. For everyone else, it’s now a question of where the next birdie comes from… and who can string it together before the opportunity goes cold.
-
Alright, here’s the latest as we move through the last couple of holes, and it’s been a mixed bag for the boys. Tony McHale had a bit of a wobble—he dropped a bogey at 15 and then compounded it with a double bogey at 16, so he stays sitting at +6. Ciaran Greene steadied himself nicely, going bogey at 15 and then bouncing back to par at 16—he’s locked in at Even. Alan Dempsey is looking sharp, a birdie at 15 followed by par at 16, holding strong at +4. And Oisin O’Malley, well, it’s been a tough run—he’s made par at both 15 and 16, but he’s still hanging around at +11, so he’ll be wanting a bounce-back soon.
-
Alright folks, insider gossip out of the ropes: Tony McHale is sitting 13th with 26 points, and word is the kid’s been quietly tweaking his setup like he’s got a secret hotline to the greens. Someone on the staff swears Tony’s been “over-reading” the slope on practice days—then backing it up on the course with a couple of very specific yardage notes nobody else gets to see. Add in the fact he’s been steady when the pressure kicks in (no panic swings, just calm tempo), and you’ve got the vibe that a low number is lurking… the kind that makes everyone say, “Wait, when did he turn it on?”
-
Oi Tony McHale… congrats on the double bogey on 16. Nothing says “controlled aggression” like donating two strokes to the sandwich of despair!!!
Down to +6 through 16 and sittin' 13th… my guy, swing like you’re trying to win, not like you’re trying to survive the weekend. 😭⛳️
-
Rivalry watch: Tony McHale is grinding through a tough stretch—after Hole 16, he’s carded a double bogey and is sitting 13th with 26 points. The round trend is declining, and that’s exactly where rivalries get loud: when momentum swings against a player, the pressure magnifies the gap on the leaderboard—and it’s often the matchup that decides who stays composed and who clicks back in.
-
Paddy Power Golf — Latest Tournament Odds (to win)
- Danny Finn (currently -7 after 16): 5/2
- Eoghan Considine (currently -4 after 16): 9/2
- Liam Rockall (currently -3 after 16): 13/2
- Dave Flanagan (currently -2 after 18): 12/1
- Ciaran Considine (currently -1 after 16): 16/1
- Mike Rockall (currently +4 after 15, improving): 200/1
- All the rest (field): Varies
How it might finish: Danny looks nailed-on to grind this one through — but with Eoghan hot on his heels after 16, we could see a late push. I’ll call it: Danny Finn to win, with Eoghan Considine scraping second, and Liam Rockall hanging around for the podium.
Mike Rockall update: Still 9th at +4 but your momentum’s turning — if you keep shaving strokes on the back nine, a sneaky top-5 isn’t out of the question, even if the win odds are way off.
-
Paddy Power Latest Tournament Odds (after the latest action):
- Danny Finn (top at -7 after 16) 4/5
- Eoghan Considine (-4 after 16) 5/1
- Liam Rockall (-3 after 16) 7/1
- Dave Flanagan (-2 after 18) 10/1
- Ciaran Considine (-1 after 16) 14/1
- Ciaran Greene (E after 15) 20/1
- Brendan Considine (+3 after 18) 33/1
Commentary: Finn has the bit between the teeth—holding the lead late after 16 means he’s the clear banker to see this out. Eoghan looks the most likely to chase him down if there’s any drop-off, with Liam right there as the third string to the final push.
How it might finish: Finn to nick it, with Eoghan pushing hardest for second and Liam completing the podium.
Phil Staunton watch: birdie at 15 to move into 16th on 20 pts, but with the round trend declining, he’ll need a couple of strong swings in the closing holes to climb meaningfully.